PDA

View Full Version : Good Morning...Hell on Earth in South Georgia



Okla-homey
2/27/2006, 07:30 AM
February 27, 1864: Federal prisoners begin arriving at Andersonville

http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/1727/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzza.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Fully one of four Union prisoners who passed through this reconstructed gate at Camp Sumter did not get out alive.

On this day 142 years ago, the first Union prisoners begin arriving at "Camp Sumter" just outside Andersonville, which was still under construction as a Confederate POW camp in southern Georgia.

http://img146.imageshack.us/img146/9873/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzgeorgiaand.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

"Andersonville" became synonymous with death as nearly a quarter of its inmates died in captivity. Swiss-native Captain Henry Wirz, the camp commander at Andersonville, was executed after the war for the brutality and mistreatment committed under his command.

http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/962/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzwirzonc.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Captain Henry Wirz, CSA

Its important to understand why a POW camp had become necessary in a country which previously had held no POWs for any substantial period of time. Prior to the third autumn of the war, both sides simply traded or "exchanged" groups of POWs from time to time thus negating any need to have a place to hold them for extended periods.

http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/1222/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz11draw2.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Andersonville painted after the war by a survivor

The prison became necessary after the prisoner exchange system between North and South collapsed in late 1863. After Gettysburg, US military leaders convinced President Lincoln that prisoner exchanges were helping the Confederacy remain in the war. See, the North had more d00ds and thus could afford permanent loss of the men they lost to Confederate capture.

The South, on the other hand, had fewer males of military age and couldn't afford the steady hemorrhage of manpower lost to capture. Therefore, Lincoln reluctantly approved the change in Federal policy which cancelled subsequent exchanges of POWs.

http://img523.imageshack.us/img523/6545/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzand47.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Recreated interior of the camp gives visitors some sense of its horror, especially when visited on a hot and buggy Georgia afternoon

The camp stockade at Andersonville was hastily constructed using slave labor, and it was located in the Georgia woods near a railroad but safely away from the front lines. Enclosing 16 acres of land, the tall palisade was supposed to include wooden barracks but the inflated price of lumber delayed construction, and the Yankee soldiers imprisoned there lived under open skies, protected only by makeshift shanties called "shebangs," constructed from scraps of wood and blankets.

http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/7254/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzandersonvi.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Another shot of the interior

The men roasted under the summer Georgia sun and shivered in the cold rainy winters. A stream initially provided fresh water, but within a few months human waste had contaminated the creek.

http://img523.imageshack.us/img523/452/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzander.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Famous contemporary image of the camp interior. The men in the foregound are "using the facilities" which involved squatting downstream over the creek which was also the only drinking water source.

The prison was built to hold 10,000 men, but within six months more than three times that number were incarcerated there. The creek banks eroded to create a swamp, which occupied more than one-fifth of the compound.

http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/9853/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz14.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
A national cemetery was created at the site. Most of the men buried there were from western states since they had been captured from Union armies formed from among westerners.

Rations were inadequate, and at times half of the population was reported ill. Some guards brutalized the inmates and there was violence between factions of prisoners.

http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/2195/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzcampsanders.gif (http://imageshack.us)
One of the thousands of human skeletons who survived to be liberated when the camp was liberated at war's end in the summer of 1865

http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/6977/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzan.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Turner Films made a pretty good movie about the situation aptly named "Andersonville" that is available on DVD and well worth a look.

Andersonville was the worst among many terrible Civil War prisons, both Union and Confederate. Henry Wirz paid the price for the inhumanity of Andersonville--he was the only person executed in the aftermath of the Civil War. Wirz remains a controversial figure to this day.

http://img159.imageshack.us/img159/3144/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzjbci.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Wirz's public hanging. He maintained he was only following orders.

As an aside, some Southern apologists insist Wirz was unfairly executed as a war criminal since the lack of resources available to him made it practically impossible for Wirz to humanely treat the massive number of Union prisoners in his charge. Alternatively, anti-Wirz people maintain that he simply should have resigned as camp commander after it became clear the Confederate government couldn't or wouldn't provide ample food and shelter to the prisoners.

To be fair, Northern prisons for Confederate POW's were little better. This is especially significant since the North had ample resources to humanely provide for its prisoners...but frankly refused to do so. The worst was probably the camp at Point Lookout on the Maryland coast. The prisoners at least had barracks, but they too were starved and cruelly treated.

http://img135.imageshack.us/img135/7540/zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz1864lookout8.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Point Lookout US POW camp.

The Andersonville site is administered by the NPS and also is home to the National Prisoner of War Museum. Well worth a visit if you ever find yourself in that part of Georgia. South of Atlanta, its just a short trip from Fort Benning in Columbus.

http://img138.imageshack.us/img138/3844/insane7zo7tv.jpg

jk the sooner fan
2/27/2006, 08:01 AM
the park ranger that works at Andersonville (at least the one that did when i was there) gives a VERY moving speech, while dressed in Union blue....of what life was like as a prisoner there

Octavian
2/27/2006, 08:06 AM
interesting stuff.

thanks Homey

VeeJay
2/27/2006, 08:22 AM
Very interesting story. Clearly, political correctness and the lack of the internet and 24/7 new channels contibuted to prisoners' conditions in the 19th Century. Being a prisoner today ain't what it used to be. The al Qaeda cats down at Gitmo probably would have reason to b!tch if they were at Andersonville.

It was a hard time for all. On my dad's side of my family, folklore is of an aunt of my great grandfather whose husband was off at war. In those times, the Yankee soldiers killed Southern civilians and took what they had just to survive. The Yanks would find themselves in parts unknown, with little civilization around - meaning no amenities, no food and water, etc. Again, it was about survival. Reportedly, my old relative saw a Yankee soldier advancing toward her cabin, and knew he was going to break in and probably kill her, and take whatever food and valuables she had (which probably wasn't much). She got a 2 X 4 and hid behind the door. When he kicked in the door, she walloped the poor bastud in the back of the head. My grandfather told me when I was a kid that the Union soldier's gun was still in the possession of somebody in our family.

When I was a kid, they took us out in the boondocks of NE Mississippi and showed us the old log cabin, which was still there as of the early 1970's.

I also went to an old homesite my grandfather took us to. The homesite had been sold, but had belonged to an ancestor during the Civil War. My grandfather told us there were bags and bags of gold coins buried behind this particular house. Again, the old ancestor buried the coins so the Yanks wouldn't take them.

These stories are intriguing and just as they were passed down to me, I'm passing them down to my kids.

Good topic, Homey, as usual!

TUSooner
2/27/2006, 10:24 AM
I recall watching an old TV play (Hallmark Hall of Fame?) prob'ly 35 years ago recreating Wirz's trial. It was fascinating. Nice jorb, Homey.

Taxman71
2/27/2006, 12:15 PM
True, POW conditions have come a long way. Me thinks the POWs at Andersonville or the Bataan death march could have overlooked a little teasing from Lindy England.

Harry Beanbag
2/27/2006, 12:17 PM
True, POW conditions have come a long way. Me thinks the POWs at Andersonville or the Bataan death march could have overlooked a little teasing from Lindy England.


What about rap music?

Taxman71
2/27/2006, 12:23 PM
What about rap music?

Good point. Especially since the only music rappers could steal in the 19th nineteenth century would have been Mozart or "she'll be coming around the mountain". It would have been hard to mix in references to hardcore sex and gang bangin with the Fat Boys beatboxing Oh Susanna.